Skip to content
Slow Life

Samsung Galaxy A25 5G Review: Great Display, Good Battery Life

A quick hands-on review of the Samsung Galaxy A25 5G with 8GB RAM and 128GB storage from a real-world user perspective.

Reviews 4 min read
Samsung Galaxy A25 5G
Samsung Galaxy A25 5G

Samsung Galaxy A25 5G

If you’re looking for a reliable mid-range smartphone with a beautiful display, strong battery life, and decent cameras, I think the Samsung Galaxy A25 5G (8GB/128GB version) is an easy recommendation that doesn’t require too much overthinking.

It may not be the most impressive phone when it comes to heavy gaming performance, but for everyday use, it feels stable, smooth, and genuinely comfortable to use.

What I personally like most about this device is how “safe” and balanced it feels. Nothing about it screams flagship-level excitement, but almost everything works well enough to make long-term usage enjoyable without annoying compromises.


SpecificationDetails
Display6.5-inch Super AMOLED, Full HD+, 120Hz
ChipsetExynos 1280
RAM8GB
Storage128GB
Rear Cameras50MP OIS + 8MP Ultra-wide + 2MP Macro
Front Camera13MP
Battery5000mAh
Fast Charging25W
Operating SystemAndroid + One UI
Connectivity & Features5G, NFC, Stereo Speakers, Side-mounted Fingerprint Sensor

Samsung Galaxy A25 5G Design

The Galaxy A25 5G keeps the familiar Samsung A-series design language with a minimalist back panel and separated camera rings. It may not look as premium as a flagship device, but the overall design is clean and modern enough.

The phone feels sturdy in hand, and the slightly flat frame actually provides a better grip compared to some overly curved phones. Even though the back is plastic, the build quality still feels solid and not cheap at all.


Samsung Galaxy A25 5G Display

This is easily the strongest selling point of the phone. Samsung still makes some of the best AMOLED displays in this price range.

Colors look vibrant, brightness is more than good enough for outdoor use, and the 120Hz refresh rate makes scrolling and animations feel very smooth.

Watching YouTube, TikTok, or Netflix on this phone is genuinely enjoyable. The contrast is excellent, especially when watching movies at night compared to typical LCD panels.

A lot of mid-range phones have disappointing speakers, but the A25 surprised me quite a bit.

The volume gets loud enough, and music or movies sound clear without too much distortion. The stereo effect also makes gaming and video watching feel noticeably more immersive.

The 5000mAh battery combined with the power-efficient Exynos 1280 delivers very solid battery life.

With normal daily usage like Facebook, Messenger, YouTube, and web browsing, the phone can comfortably last until the evening with battery to spare.

This is the type of phone you can bring outside all day without constantly worrying about carrying a power bank.

The camera system doesn’t try too hard with overly artificial processing.

Photos from the 50MP main camera look pleasing with Samsung’s familiar color tuning: bright, vibrant, and social-media-friendly while still keeping a respectable amount of detail.

The OIS stabilization also works surprisingly well for handheld video recording, reducing shake noticeably during light movement.

Below are a few photos I captured using the rear camera of the Samsung Galaxy A25 5G during a trip to Ninh Bình. All photos were taken using the default camera settings:

Photo taken with Samsung Galaxy A25 5G

Photo taken with Samsung Galaxy A25 5G

Photo taken with Samsung Galaxy A25 5G


The phone handles games like Arena of Valor or PUBG reasonably well at medium settings, but if you play demanding games like Genshin Impact for extended periods, you’ll definitely notice heating and FPS drops.

This is more of a stable daily-use smartphone rather than a gaming-focused device.

From the front, the phone still clearly looks like an A-series device. It’s not ugly, but it doesn’t feel as premium as the Galaxy S lineup either.

If you care a lot about front design aesthetics, this might be something you notice.

Samsung continues its slightly annoying tradition here.

If you want the full 25W fast charging experience, you’ll most likely need to buy a compatible charger separately.


In my opinion, the Galaxy A25 5G is a great choice for people who want:

  • A stable phone for long-term daily use
  • A beautiful display for entertainment
  • Strong battery life
  • Easy-to-use cameras
  • Samsung’s One UI experience

However, if your top priority is gaming performance or raw power, devices from Xiaomi or POCO in the same price range may offer better value.


The Samsung Galaxy A25 5G 8/128GB is not the most powerful or flashy smartphone on paper, but it’s the kind of device that becomes more enjoyable the longer you use it.

It feels reliable, well-built, stable, and polished. The display is excellent, the battery life is reassuringly good, and overall usability is one of its biggest strengths.

For me, this is one of the more worthwhile Samsung mid-range phones if you care more about everyday user experience than benchmark scores.

Comments